1⁄35The Cat That Never Scratched
Aside from the tank which I spray painted with a base
color of olive drab, everything else was hand painted using acrylic colors
and a little of tamiya enamel paints. One thing I learned in painting
specially the figures is that acrylic paints don’t settle on bare plastic,
that’s why I undercoated it with tamiya enamel paint of dark yellow. My
background in painting ( I graduated with a degree in fine arts major in
painting ) specially with oil mediums helped me in my process of painting
the scene. Everything in the dio is painted with base colors. My usual way
of painting the details is working my way from dark tones going to the
lightest of tones. After achieving my desired colors, I started washing
everything with earth colors and finaly black to make an inconsistent color
finish on everything. One tip I can give in is that no object has a
consistent flat color. Objects must have varying shades of the base color to
make it look realistic. After washing everything… I started to dry brush the
burnt effect on everything I wanted to look burned using black. And for my
final touch I sprinkled the garden soil and made sure that it accumulates in
nooks and corners. Think how gravity works when doing this, dust accumulates
on areas not usually disturbed and at flat surfaces. I also used this soil
to weather the tank by adding dilluted glue to it and applying it with a
brush. I made the rust effect using acrylic colors of burnt sienna top with
yellow ochre applied in thick patches. Copyright ©2002 - Text and Photos by Christopher Magsino. All Rights Reserved. |
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